Luz Vallekas
C/ de Melquiades Biencinto, 7,28039 Madrid
Find your ideal coworking space in Madrid, Spain. We list 220 workspaces with detailed pricing, photos, reviews, and availability — all in one place.
Madrid's coworking market has matured quietly but decisively. The city now counts 230 spaces, concentrated in a handful of business-friendly neighborhoods but increasingly spreading to residential districts where remote workers actually live. Average day rates land at €22.48 — nearly identical to Barcelona — with monthly memberships averaging €262.
Tetuán, the district north of Chamartín, has become Madrid's coworking corridor by default. The area sits between the traditional business zone and the newer financial district around the Cuatro Torres, making it convenient for freelancers who split their time between client meetings and focused work. Praxis Globe (€19/day) and Oficinas Ya Capitan Haya (€27/day) both operate here, and the neighborhood offers significantly cheaper lunch options than the center.
Salamanca is the prestige pick. Doma Business charges €24/day in a district known for luxury retail and corporate law firms. The clientele here tends toward consultants, lawyers, and small financial advisory firms — people whose clients expect a certain address. It's not cheap, but monthly rates at €349 are still a fraction of what a traditional office lease would cost on Calle Serrano.
Chamberí, Chamartín, and Hortaleza round out the main coworking zones. Coolwork in Chamberí (€22/day, €338/month) attracts a younger creative crowd, while Despachos La Liebre 38 in Hortaleza (€23/day, €218/month) caters to small businesses that need private offices without long-term commitments. Chamartín's Coworking 40 Jardin (€25/day, €189/month) offers an unusually low monthly rate for its location.
Day passes range from €15 to €29, which puts Madrid in the same bracket as Barcelona and well below Paris or London. The monthly picture is more interesting: the average of €262 masks a wide spread, with operators like Coworking 40 Jardin offering monthly plans under €190 — essentially less than many gym memberships — while premium spaces in Salamanca push past €350.
The value proposition gets stronger when you factor in Madrid's cost of living. Rent remains 20–30% below Barcelona in many neighborhoods, and lunch menus (the famous menú del día) in coworking-adjacent restaurants routinely cost €11–€13 for a full meal. A freelancer spending €22/day on workspace and €12 on lunch is running a daily overhead of €34 — try that in London.
Madrid attracts a different crowd than Barcelona. Where Barcelona pulls international nomads and tech startups, Madrid's coworking spaces skew toward Spanish professionals: consultants, journalists, translators, and small business owners. The international contingent is growing — particularly Latin American remote workers who appreciate the timezone alignment and cultural familiarity — but Madrid remains a fundamentally Spanish-speaking coworking city.
The government sector's presence also shapes the market. Proximity to ministries, regulatory bodies, and industry associations means that lobbyists, policy consultants, and NGO workers are a visible segment of Madrid's coworking population. Spaces near Sol, Chueca, and Alonso Martínez tend to attract this profile.
Madrid's metro system is excellent, so prioritize spaces near metro stops over those in theoretically better neighborhoods. A space in Tetuán that's two minutes from Line 10 will serve you better than one in Malasaña that requires a 10-minute walk.
Summer heat is real — Madrid regularly hits 40°C in July and August. Air conditioning quality varies dramatically between spaces. The newer, purpose-built spaces generally handle it well; converted apartments and ground-floor spaces sometimes don't. Ask or visit during a hot afternoon before committing.
Unlike Barcelona, Madrid doesn't empty out in August as dramatically, but expect reduced activity in coworking spaces during the first two weeks. Many Spanish companies still observe traditional vacation schedules, so the networking benefits of coworking thin out considerably during that window.
C/ de Melquiades Biencinto, 7,28039 Madrid
5 Calle de Pradillo
C. Cardenal Solís, 5,28012 Madrid
1 Calle de Torregalindo
54 Calle Fernando Poo
161 Paseo de la Castellana
50 Calle de Tomás Bretón
Calle de Juan Ignacio Luca de Tena, 1 San Blas-Canillejas
6 Calle de Isabel Colbrand
C. de Toledo, 46,28005 Madrid
C. de Serrano, 110,28006 Madrid
34 Calle de Tampico
Everything you need to know before choosing your space in Madrid.
List your space for free and reach thousands of professionals.
Add my space